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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
collapse
)
28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the period of 1 year (1988 to 1989), five infants, aged 3 weeks to 10 months, presented with recurrent respiratory distress following repair of esophageal atresia with tracheoesphageal fistula (EA/TEF). These patients had associated congenital anomalies, including right aortic arch (1), biliary atresia (1), and a long gap that required esophageal elongation by spiral myotomy (1). The patients were evaluated for tracheomalacia using cinecomputed tomography (cine-CT; C-100 Scanner, Imatron,
San
Francisco, CA), which provides images of eight levels (8-mm interval) simultaneously with 0.7 second time intervals of cine-CT. Dynamic studies of the trachea by cine-CT showed tracheal
collapse
that was most significant during expiration in the segment immediately above and at the aortic arch. These patients underwent aortosternopexy. Via a right second intercostal approach, the ascending aorta and aortic arch were lifted anteriorly using two to four sutures of 5-0 Tevdek on pledgets placed between the tunica media and adventitia of the side walls of the aorta and the adjacent sternum. Respiratory distress was significantly improved postoperatively. Preliminary experience with these patients allows us to conclude that (1) cine-CT is a useful technique for diagnosing tracheomalacia; (2) it provides objective indication for its correction by aortosternopexy; and (3) the refined technique in placing sutures on the aorta may reduce the surgical risks of aortosternopexy.
...
PMID:Aortosternopexy for tracheomalacia following repair of esophageal atresia: evaluation by cine-CT and technical refinement. 238 Aug 94
At the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinics in
San
Francisco, the recreational use of cocaine is on a precipitous incline of popularity. Intensified symptoms of intoxication and the possibility of overdose parallel the current fad of smoking "freebase." We examined the "cocaine reaction," an adrenergic storm affecting CNS, respiratory and cardiovascular systems, which may proceed to generalized
collapse
and death within minutes. The physiologic and pharmacologic mechanisms of the reaction are elaborated, and a logical algorithm of treatment is outlined. The psychodynamics of the "armed" cocaine personality is discussed, as is the proper psychological approach to these patients. A specific indicated technical and pharmacologic approach, as well as several caveats of therapy that have been clinically developed in the treatment of several hundred cases of cocaine overdose, are presented.
...
PMID:Clinical management of acute and chronic cocaine poisoning. 675 Nov 71
This study identified predictors of symptomatic distress in emergency services (EMS) personnel exposed to traumatic critical incidents. A replication was performed in 2 groups: 154 EMS workers involved in the 1989 Interstate 880 freeway
collapse
during the
San
Francisco Bay area earthquake, and 213 counterparts from the Bay area and from
San
Diego. Evaluated predictors included exposure, social support, and psychological traits. Replicated analyses showed that levels of symptomatic distress were positively related to the degree of exposure to the critical incident. Level of adjustment was also related to symptomatic distress. After exposure, adjustment, social support, years of experience on the job, and locus of control were controlled, 2 dissociative variables remained strongly predictive of symptomatic response. The study strengthens the literature linking dissociative tendencies and experiences to distress from exposure to traumatic stressors.
...
PMID:Predicting symptomatic distress in emergency services personnel. 760 48
On 17 October 1989, an earthquake measuring 7.1 on the Richter scale struck the
San
Francisco Bay Area, causing the
collapse
of .76 miles of a double-decker roadway (known as the Cypress Street Viaduct), resulting in the death of 42 people. A study examined the effects of rescue work at 6 and 20 months after the event, among 42 people including: military pararescuers, firefighters, transportation workers, and coroner-investigators. The researcher explored the rescuers' motivations, actions, coping strategies, interactions, and understanding of their responses to the event, as well as the practical wisdom each acquired. This article focuses on the 6-month data, and reports the specific work meanings and practices that shaped forms of involvement, issues of stress, and sources of coping that influenced the experience of rescue work in this disaster.
...
PMID:Occupational meanings and coping practices of rescue workers in an earthquake disaster. 803 3
A three-group quasi-experimental design contrasted the responses of rescue workers to the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake Interstate 880 freeway
collapse
(n = 198) with responses to critical incident exposure of Bay Area Controls (n = 140) and
San
Diego Controls (n = 101). The three groups were strikingly similar with respect to demographics and years of emergency service. The I-880 group reported higher exposure, greater immediate threat appraisal, and more sick days. The three groups did not differ on current symptoms. For the sample as a whole EMT/Paramedics reported higher peritraumatic dissociation compared with Police. EMT/Paramedics and California road workers reported higher symptoms compared with Police and Fire personnel. Nine percent of the sample were characterized as having symptom levels typical of psychiatric outpatients. Compared with lower distress responders, those with greater distress reported greater exposure, greater peritraumatic emotional distress, greater peritraumatic dissociation, greater perceived threat, and less preparation for the critical incident.
...
PMID:Stress responses of emergency services personnel to the Loma Prieta earthquake Interstate 880 freeway collapse and control traumatic incidents. 875 Apr 52
Treatment of airway
collapse
in the retrolingual airway for obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and snoring has been a frequently frustrating exercise. There are several procedures that have been used with varying degrees of success for some time. These procedures include genioglossus advancement and hyoid suspension, as well as various forms of lingual plasty and lingual reduction. A new technique was introduced at the 1998 meeting of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery in
San
Antonio that consisted of using a suspension screw to support the hypopharyngeal soft tissues, specifically, the base of the tongue, to prevent its posterior displacement during sleep. Some of the initial results of these studies have been promising and are reviewed here.
...
PMID:Suspension sutures for the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea and snoring. 1038 37
Stabilized microbubbles used as echo-contrast agents can be destroyed by ultrasonic irradiation. We have identified two pressure thresholds at which these microbubbles undergo inertial cavitation (here, defined as the
collapse
of gas bubbles followed by emission of an acoustic broadband noise). The first threshold (P1) corresponds to the pressure at which all the microbubbles in a cavitation field lose their property as an effective scatterer because of fragmentation or deflation. The second threshold (P2) is associated with the acoustic reactivation of the remnants of the contrast agents and is related to the onset of more violent inertial cavitation. P1 and P2 were measured as a function of the concentration of Albunex (Molecular Biosystems Inc.,
San
Diego, CA) contrast agent, the number of transmitting acoustic cycles, and the pulse repetition frequency (PRF). The ultrasound frequency used was 1.1 MHz, and the peak negative acoustic pressures ranged from 0 to 8 MPa. Our results, measured in Isoton II (Coulter Diagnostics, Miami, FL) and whole blood solutions, showed that P1 increased with increasing Albunex concentration and decreased with increasing PRF, whereas P2 decreased with increasing Albunex concentration and was independent of the PRF. Both P1 and P2 decreased with increasing number of acoustic cycles N for N < 10 and were independent of the number of cycles for N > 10. Ultrasound images of Albunex acquired by a commercial scanner showed echo enhancement not only at pressure levels below P1 but also at levels above P2. The threshold P2 was achieved at ultrasound energies above the diagnostic level. Inertial cavitation produced at P2 was associated with a higher level of hemolysis compared with P1. The results of this investigation have potential significance for both diagnostic and therapeutic ultrasound applications.
...
PMID:Thresholds for inertial cavitation in albunex suspensions under pulsed ultrasound conditions. 1136 83
Focus in this discussion of Nicaragua is on the following: geography; the people and history; government and polictical conditions; the economy; foreign relations; defense; and relations between the US and Nicaragua. Nicaragua's population is 2.9 million with an annual growth rate of 3.3% (1981). The infant mortality rate is 37/1000; life expectancy is 56 years. Most Nicaraguans are mestizo, a mix of European and Indian. Smaller ethnic groups also are recognizable. A large black minority of Jamaican origin is concentrated on the Caribbean coast, although migration to Managua is on the rise. Nicaragua borders Costa Rica to the south and El Salvador--across the Gulf of Fonseca--and Honduras to the north. The climate is tropical. About 40% of the population are urban; most live in the Pacific lowlands and the adjacent interior highlands region. On July 19, 1979 the Government of National Reconstruction formed in exile as a coalition of the Sandinista Front for National Liberation (FSLN) and civic leaders, stepped into the power vacuum left by the Somoza government's
collapse
. The GRN was organized into a 5-member junta, the 19 member Council of Ministers, and the 33 member quasi legislative National Council. The GRN's July 19 Declaration of
San
Jose, promising a democratically elected government and an equitable pluralistic society, met with strong popular support. Freedom of speech, press, religion, and assembly are guaranteed by the declaration, yet the GRN's efforts at promoting political freedom have been less successful than its efforts at economic equity. At different times, the GRN has restricted operation of opposition newspapers on national security grounds, banned individual foreign films on political grounds, attempted to reduce the role of the Roman Catholic Church and tried to reduce the traditional autonomy of the national university. The country's resources are primarily agricultural. Some estimates indicate that 70% of Nicaragua's territory is usable for agriculture of livestock, though much is underutilized. Currently, more than half the country is covered in forest. The forest industry collapsed since it was nationalized, although its potential remains. Nicaragua's industrial sector is still small but grew rapidly following the formation of the Central American Common Market. Nicaragua's current economic problems stem from continued tension between the private sector and the revolutionary government, which has discouraged private investment. The GRN is committed to maintaining ties with all nations while espousing a policy of nonalignment. The FSLN has converted and expanded the military. The US has contributed $128 million in economic aid to Nicaragua. Nicaraguan support for the Salvadoran insurgents resulted in a US presidential determination in April 1981 to suspend US aid to Nicaragua.
...
PMID:Nicaragua. 1217 81
To observe trends in the surgical therapy of pulmonary tuberculosis, the records of patients treated during the last ten years at the Tuberculosis Division of the
San
Diego County General Hospital (Vauclain Home) were reviewed. In this decade, a chemotherapeutic revolution permitted more patients to be treated with fewer beds, lower mortality and shorter hospitalization. Pneumoperitoneum has replaced other forms of temporary
collapse
. Pneumothorax, phrenic nerve interruption and pneumonolysis have been abandoned in favor of extraperiosteal plombage, particularly in older, poor risk patients. The use of permanent
collapse
measures as definitive treatment has decreased, thoracoplasty and extrapleural pneumothorax having been virtually abandoned. The use of resection in patients with permanent
collapse
failure, residual cavities, bronchostenosis and destroyed lobes or lungs has become common, and good results have been obtained.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis; a decade of change. 1331 46
The prehistoric population of
San
Pedro de Atacama lived through periods marked by prosperity and interregional interaction, as well as times of severe drought, social stress, and widespread poverty. A sample of 682 crania was analyzed for evidence of cranial trauma in order to assess changing patterns of interpersonal violence during the occupation of the oasis. It was hypothesized that the level of traumatic injuries in this population would parallel some of the changes seen in the archaeological record. Low fracture rates would be expected in periods of affluence and environmental stability, while periods characterized by environmental extremes and state
collapse
would yield elevated rates of aggression. This analysis found that rates of trauma escalated from 5.1% (5/99) in the earliest period, to 10.9% (10/92) in the Middle Horizon (AD 600-950). Although it may reflect problems related to increasing population density in the oasis, this increase is surprising, given that the early period witnessed the shift to permanent settlements, and the middle period was one of prosperity and plentiful resource availability. Trauma rates peaked at 35.6% (16/45) in an early Late Intermediate period (AD 950-1400) cemetery, with other Late Intermediate cemeteries demonstrating similarly high rates of traumatic injury. The elevated trauma rates during this period correlate with major droughts, the concentration of settlements on the oasis' east side, fortified structures, and material poverty, all reflected in the archaeological record. As the Late Intermediate waned and environmental conditions improved, trauma concomitantly decreased (7.0%), and remained low throughout the Inka occupation (AD 1400-1532). This indicates that while the Atacama was not peaceful, violence became commonplace only during periods of great social change and resource stress.
...
PMID:Interpersonal violence in prehistoric San Pedro de Atacama, Chile: behavioral implications of environmental stress. 1635 21
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